Enya (album)
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Enya | ||
Studio album by Enya | ||
Released | 1987 | |
Recorded | 1986 | |
Genre | New Age | |
Length | 39:06 | |
Label | BBC | |
Producer(s) | Nicky Ryan | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Enya chronology | ||
Enya (1987) |
Watermark (1988) |
Enya (later re-released as The Celts) is the first album by Irish singer Enya, released in 1987 (see 1987 in music). Enya's first full-album recording, Enya/The Celts features music written and recorded for the soundtrack of the 1986 documentary television series, The Celts.
Recorded in 1986, it was not released until 1987 when the series was first broadcast. The album was first released in the UK by the BBC on their own label, and later issued in North America by Atlantic Records. In 1992, Warner Music reissued a remixed and slightly revised version of the album as The Celts. The original version Enya was no longer manufactured.
The Fugees sampled "Boadicea" from this album for their song "Ready or Not" on 1996's The Score. Enya had prepared to sue the group for copyright infringement because they had not asked for permission and did not give her credit. After learning that The Fugees were not gangsta rappers, Enya declined to follow through with the suit, but stickers were then placed on The Score giving Enya credit for her work. [1] Mario Winans also sampled "Boadicea" for the melody of the song "I Don't Wanna Know" (2004). Producer P. Diddy reportedly personally contacted Enya for permission and gave her 60 percent of the royalties. She also received name billing ("Mario Winans featuring Enya and P. Diddy") for the song, which turned out to be a hit, putting her name #2 on the "Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks" chart in 2004. [2]
The album contains only a portion of the music Enya composed for the TV series. In 2005, a previously unreleased track from these sessions, a "Spaghetti Western Theme" done in the style of Hugo Montenegro, was released on the CD-single for "Amarantine", in memory of one of the producers of the TV series.
Music from the Celts soundtrack would later be reused for the soundtrack of the video production The Memory of Earth, produced by David Bickley.[3]
The song "Boadicea" was also on the "Sleepwalkers" (1992) soundtrack.
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
- "The Celts" – 2:50
- "Aldebaran" (dedicated to Ridley Scott) – 3:05
- "I Want Tomorrow" – 4:02
- "March of the Celts" – 3:10
- "Deireadh an Tuath" – 1:43
- "The Sun in the Stream" – 2:55
- "To Go Beyond, Pt. 1" – 1:20
- "Fairytale" – 3:03
- "Epona" – 1:36
- "Triad: St. Patrick / Cú Chulainn / Oisin" – 4:25
- "Portrait" – 1:23 1
- "Boadicea" – 3:30
- "Bard Dance" – 1:23
- "Dan y Dŵr" – 1:41
- "To Go Beyond, Pt. 2" – 2:50
1 1990s Warner reissue substituted the original recording of this song, called "Portrait", with a longer re-recording of the same piece, "Out of the Blue", which had been released on the B-side of "Orinoco Flow". The original "Portrait" version can be found on the BBC and Atlantic Records issues.
[edit] Personnel
- Enya – all other instruments, vocals
- Patrick Halling – violin
- Arty McGlynn – electric guitar
- Liam O'Flynn – uillean pipes
- Roma Ryan – lyrics
[edit] Production
- All music composed by Enya and Published by Aigle Music.
- Words for "I Want Tomorrow" and "Dan y Dwr" written by Roma Ryan
- Words for "The Celts", "March of the Celts", "Aldebaran" and "Deireadh an Tuath" written by Enya and Roma Ryan.
- Words to "St. Patrick" are traditional.
- Enya: Vocals, Piano, Juno 60, DX7, Emulator II and Kurtzweil
- Music arranged by Enya and Nicky Ryan.
- Recorded at BBC Enterprises Studio Woodlands, London, and Aigle Studios, Dublin.
- Producer: Nicky Ryan
- Executive Producer: Bruce Talbot
- Engineers: Nigel Reid, Nicky Ryan
- Sleeve Design and Art Direction: Mario Moscardini
- Photography: Martyn J. Adleman
- Re-Mastered by Sam Feldman at Atlantic Studios, NYC
[edit] Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|
1990 | Top New Age Albums (US) | 14 |
1992 | Official Album Chart (UK) | 10 |